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8. P. CALLAWAY, Editor & Pkop’b.
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1893.
In a Nut Shell.
An old farmer of Sumter county,
who has a level head, writes to the
Americus Times-Recorder as follows:
“There is being so much said in the
country about hard times and the
scarcity of money, and as everybody
has a cause and knows a remedy, I
thought I would write to tell your
readers what I think is the cause.
The trouble is we buy more than we
produce. There is too much flour
and bacon shipped here every year.
The things we ought to make at home
we are buying.
“We let our timber rot and buy our
plow stocks, singletrees, ax handles,
hoe handles and fencing.
“We throw away our ashes and buy
soap and axle grease.
“We give away our beef hides and
buy hame stiings and shoe strings.
“We let our manure go to waste and
buy guano.
"We buy garden seed in the spring
and cabbage in the winter.
“We let our lands grow up in weeds
and buy our brooms.
“We let the wax out of our pine aud
and gum trees go to waste and buy
shewing gum for our children.
“We build schoolhouses and hire
teachers and send our children oft to
be educated.
“We land a 5 cent fish with a $1
fishing rod.
“We send a 15-cent boy out witn a
$20 gun and a $4 dog to kill birds.
“We raise dogs and buy wool.
“And about the only thing in this
oountry that there is an over produc
tion of is politics and dogtics.”
Strong nerves, sweet sleep, good
appetite, healthy digestion, and best
of all, pure blood, are given by Hood’s
Sarsaparilla.
Thin out the grapevines and other
small faults which have been set too
thickly.
A Leader.
Since its first introduction, Electric
Bitters has gained rapidly in popular
favor, until now it is clearly in the
lead among pure medical tonics and
alteratives—containing nothing
which permits its use as a beverage or
intoxicant, it is recognized as the best
and purest medicine for all ailments
of Stomach, Liver or Kidneys.—It
will cure Sick Headache, Indigestion,
Constipation, and drive Malaria from
the system. Satisfaction guaranteed
with each bottle or the money will be
refunded. Price ODly 50c. per bottle.
Sold by W. T. Herring.
One March pig is worth two May
pigs, though there is money in May
pigs.
We would not urge an article with
out merit. We urge and guarantee
Plantation dull Cure. Sold by Brad-
fieid & Slack.
Persian insect powder is said to be
a good remedy for the sheep louse.
Deafness Cannot be Cured
by local applications as they cannot
reach the diseased portion of the ear.
There is only one way to cure deaf
ness, and that is by constitutional
remedies. Deafness is caused by an
inflamed condition of the mucous
lining of the Eustachian Tube. When
this tube is inflamed you have a rum
bling sound or imperfect bearing, and
when It is entirely closed, Deafness is
the result, and unless the inflammation
can be taken out and thistuberestored
to its normal condition,hearing will be
- destroyed forever: niDe cases out of
ten aie caused by catarrh, which is
nothing but an inflamed condition of
the mucous surfaces.
We will give One Hundred Dollars
for any case of Deafness (caused by
catarrh) that cannot be cured by
Hall’s Catarrh Cure. Bend for circu
lare; free.
F. J. Chemey & Co., Toledo, O.
#®~Sold by Druggists, 75e.
Sweet potatoes thrive best in a
warm, sandy and rather rich soil.
For a lame back or for a pain in the
side or chest, try saturating a piece
of flannel with Chamberlain’s Pain
Balm and binding it in the affected
parts. This treatment will cure any
ordinary ease in one or two days.
Pain Balm also cures rheumatism. 50
oent bottles for eale by all Druggists
and Medicine Dealers.
Flums should be carefully handled,
so as not to injure the bloom.
I have been a great sufferer from
dry catarrh for many years, and I
■? juried many remedies, but none did me
Mhmueh benefit as Ely’s Cream Balm.
It completely cured me. M. J. Laity,
39, Woodward Are., Boston High
lands, Maes.
After using Ely’s Cream Balm two
^months I was surprised to And that
He right nostril, which was closed for
oWer twenty years, was open and free
asNtbe other, and can use it eow as I
i could not do for many years. I feel
Ivery thankful.—B. H. CresBengham,
' SS518th St., Brooklyn.
A MAD STOKER’S WILD RIDE.
Pulled tlie Throttle Wide Open and Toro
Headlong to Deuth.
On Wednesday morning last, there
started from tlie Station at Padua,
on the Bologna railway line, a goods
train that should have reached Bo
logna in the evening. There were
on the engine the driver and stoker,
botli natives of Bologna. On the train
arriving at Poggio Renatico, a small
station close to Ferrara, the stoker
found some means to get rid of the
driver. He told him that the station
master wanted him. The driver, as
he afterward asserted, left the train
without the slightest suspicion of
anything.
The stoker then, without being
soon, detached the engine from the
rest of the train, put on full steam
and started off with the engine. lie
tied the spring of the whistle down
in such a way that the engine ca
reered along at always increasing
speed, whistling all the time. He
also kept filling up the furnace, so
that there was no chance of the
engine working itself out. The en
gine at a tremendous pace passed
through five stations.
The Bologna papers say that for
those who witnessed the mad race
of the engine, going to certain ruin
as it rushed through the different
stations, the spectacle was terrible.
At all the stations the officials rushed
out and made signs for him to stop,
at the same time turning on all the
danger signals. The stoker, how
ever, stood calmly looking out of the
cab of the engine without taking the
slightest notice.
At the different crossroads the
men appointed to bar them when
the trains passed, on hearing the
whistle, were able to do so in time,
or some had accident might have
happened. Telegrams were immedi
ately sent to the station at Bologna
warning the station master. He at
once had the principal line cleared
and switches put on which would
turn the engine on to a side line.
The engine soon appeared at full
speed, and men were stationed along
the line to call out to the stoker to
stop or to throw himself off the en
gine. He stood there, however, look
ing as pale as death, but only smiled
at the shouted warnings of the men.
He calmly walked along the side of
the engine and placed himself on
the standing board in front right
under the funnel. A moment after
ward the engine dashed into a rail
way carriage that had been left on
the side line.
Tlie crash was tremendous, the
carriage was smashed to bits and
the engine damaged in such a way
that it had to be broken up. Tlie
stoker was found under the debris
fearfully crushed, hut still alive, and
was taken to the hospital. It is sup
posed that he had gone suddenly
mad.
It seems, as far as can he made out
by what ho said, that his intention
was to commit suicide in that horri
ble manner because he was mixed up
in a theft of 10 francs and was afraid
of being found out.—London Tablet.
Why It Is “a Tabby Cat.”
Some writers on the curiosity of
animal nomenclature tell us that the
reason we call a feline of certain
markings of color a “tabby” cat is
because Tabitha was the goddess of
the crooked clawed species. Wag
ner’s “Names and Their Meaning,”
although it has a splendid depart
ment on the nicknames of birds, does
not refer to those applied to the ani
mal species at all, therefore it will be
of no use to consult that work to find
out why a “tabby” cat hears its
unique name, or why a “Jerusalem”
donkey is so called.
In a curious old work (pidnted in
London in 1606) entitled “Names Ap
plied to Animate Things,” I find the
following, which seems to explain
the tabby cat enigma: “The terme
‘Tabbie Cat’ is derived from Atab, a
famouse streetein Bagdad, a cittie of
the Orient. This streete is inhabited
by the manufacturers of a silken stuff
called ‘atabi,’ the wave dmarkings of
the watered silke resembling a cat’s
coat. From that we call all cats so
marked ‘atab,’ ‘atabhie,’ or simply
“tabbie’ cats.”—St. Louis Republic.
Lazy Men of the Tropics.
“The laziest fellers I ever see, not
barrin Thompson there even,” said
the man with the ginger heard, “was
down in Central America. Tell you
what I see once. I wandered into a
little saloon that one of the greasers
kep’, and what should I bee but a lot
of fellers settin round a table with a
lot of dice on it, an all of ’em watchin
them dice as if they spected them
to turn over of theirselves, which,
sure enough, they did in a minute.
Then I got onto their game. You see,
about every three or four minutes
there is an earthquake in that coun
try, and them lazy half breeds was
lettin the earthquake do the shakin
of the box for ’em. Now, what do
you think of that?”—Indianapolis
Journal.
St. Paul’s Epistle In Turkey.
The Rev. G. Furness Smith, an
English missionary, recently related
to a London meeting that the Turk
ish authorities at Constantinople had
declined to allow the circulation of
St. Paul’s Epistle to the Galatians,
supposing the people of Gala.ta, a sub
urb of the Turkish capital, to ba
those addressed, and refused to be
entirely satibueu uu tlie point till a
certificate of St. Paul’s death was
forthcoming.
Pointers for Subscribers.
The ' Washington Post prints the
following decisions of the United
States court relating to the liability of
newspaper subscribers:
1. Sutiscrlbeis wbo do not give ex
press ordeis to the contrary are con
sidered as wishing to renew their sub
scriptions.
2. If subscribers order the dis
continuance ol their periodicals, the
publisher may ontinuo to send them
until all arreuiegrs aro paid.
3. If subscribers nog led or refuse to
take their perildicals from the post-
office to which they are directed, they
nro responsible until they have settled
their bills aud ordered them discon
tinued.
4. If subscribers move to other
places without informing the pub
lisher, and the papers are sent to the
former address they are held respon
sible.
5. The courts have decided that re
fusing to take periodicals from the of-
Uue or moving and leaving them un
called for is a prima facie of intention
al fraud.
C. If subscribers pay in advance
they are bound to give notice at the
end of the time, if they do not wish to
continue taking it; otherwise the pub
lisher is authoiized to send it, and the
subsetiber will be responsible until
an express nolice with all arrearages
ate sent to the publisher.
The latest postal laws are such that
the newspaper publisher can arrest
any one for ft and who takes a paper
and refuses to pay for it. Under this
law the man who allows his subscrip
tion to rim along l'or some time unpaid
and then ordeis it discontinued, or
ofdeis the postmaster to mark it “re
fused,” and have a postal card sent
n otifjit g 11 e i ublisher, leaves him
self liable to attest and tine, the same
as for Lin fr.
The second edition ot The Cosmo
politan for September brought the
total edition up to 211,900 copies, with
out doubt I he largest edition of any
magazine in the world for this month.
It remained lor The Cosmopolitan to
have the World’s Fair treated in a
single number by twelve different
writers. As the exposition of 1893
must remain one of the leading events
in the history of the United States,
the most distinguished men were
asked to prepare this magazine vol
ume, which is destined to become
valuable as ODe of the most perfect
descriptions of the World’s Fair.
AmoDg the numbers of those who
contribute are our only ex president,
W alter Besant, the must distinguish
ed cf the English literary men who
visited the exposition, and a host of
others. Besides the usual fiction,
including a story by Mark Twain,
entitled, “Is He Living or Is He
Dead,” and the regular departments,
The Cosmopolitan contains nearly
one hundred illustrations devoted to
the World’s Fair, including eleven
full pages. It is pronounced one of
the most remarkable ot the publica
tion s jet iesued regarding the Fair.
It is a completely illustrated guide
or souvenir, as one prefers to call it,
by the most famous writers of the
day, put before the reader at the
price of J2 1-2 cents, and more than
the equal of the boobs of the Fair
which sell for seventy-five cents and
one dollar.
Salted Almonds.—Blanch one
pound of almonds and dry; add oue
deseit-spoon of fine salt, spread on
butiered puns, and put iu the oven
until they are a pale yellow, stirring
frequently.
Cough! Cough! Cough! Then a
Coffin.
Stop it quick. Plantation Cough
Syrup will do ir, and price only 25
and 50c. Why notjftry it? Sold and
guaranteed satisfactory by
Bradtield & Slack.
The better the cultivation the better
will be tbe vegetables^rown.
In transplanting be sure to press
tbe dirt flimly around th6 roots.
State of Ohio, City of Toledo, I
Lucas County. j 88
Fbank J. Cheney makes oath that
he is the senior partner of the firm of
F. J. Cheney & Co., doing business in
the City cf Toledo, County and State
aforesaid, and that said firm will pay
the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOL
LARS for each and every case of
Catarrh that cannot be cured by the
use of Hall’s Catarrh Cure.
FRANK J. CHENEY.
Sworn to before me and subscribed
in my presence, this 6th day of De
cember, A. D. 1886.
| seal. [ A. W. GLEASON,
1 —>— ’ Notary Public.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internal
ly and acta directly on the blood and
mucous surfaces of tbe system, Send
tor testimonials, free.
Senor Carulla of Madrid bas pub
lished an edition of the Bible in verse.
‘ • TALKING SHOP.
A Very DUn^reeablo Habit Which the
Now Yorker Indulged to tlio Extreme.
Very few people realize how utter
ly stupid aud uninteresting to an
outsider is the almost universal habit
of “talking shop”—that is, keeping
tlio conversation in channels of ex
clusively individual interest. New
York people especially are wont to
consider their local interests para
mount, and when a visitor from any
other city or any one who is not in
their “set” happens to bo among
them they almost invariably ignore
them and talk “over their heads,” as
it were, leaving tlieir unfortunate
guest to glean wliat amusement lie
or she can from tbe purely personal
talk which is not in the least inter
esting to an outsider.
This criticism is more applicable to
women than to men and is particu
larly noticeable in tbe fashionable
set. Masculine interests are natu
rally broader and more cosmopoli
tan, aud men’s talk therefore is not
60 circumscribed. But woe be to tlie
stranger who finds herself left to the
tender mercies of a fashionable lot
of women in Now York. She is
simply and entirely “out of it” and
is alone in a crowd, the most unen
durable solitude imaginable. This is
not an imaginary charge to bring
against New York women, by tlie
way. It is a well known fact and
one that has frequently been com
mented upon.
Less rude perhaps, hut quite as
boring to an outsider, is the disposi
tion to “talk shop” in the way of
servants, children and various other
domestic matters on the part of kind
hearted matrons, who would not for
the world intentionally neglect a
guest or a visitor. But who cannot
fancy that any other subject can be
so interesting as their servants’ de
linquencies or their children’s ill
nesses? What can he more tiresome
to an outsider than to be suddenly
dropped into a community who have
some common interest in which ho is
totally uninterested? We are all
such egotists, after all, and it seems
so natural to think that what ab
sorbs us should interest others that
it is hard for us to idealize that we
may on occasions he both selfish aud
ill bred.—New New York Tribune.
An Electric Shaving Pot.
An addition to the recent electrical
appliances has appeared in the shape
of an electrically heated sharing pot.
This pot can be made instantly avail
able in any room to which current
for light is supplied. The base of the
pot Is hollow, like the bottom of a
champagne bottle, and a lamp is
slipped inside, the bottom of the pot
being closed up by a metal reflector
having a circular hole in it, through
which the neck of tlie lamp passes
into the lampholder fixed on the base.
A small amount of light passes out
below the.reflector through a ring of
glass just above the cap of the lamp
and is reflected by the white base be
low. This light is more than suffi
cient to use the apparatus by in a
bedroom. One pomt in which this
appliance differs from other electric
kettles is that lamps of various can
dle power can be readily inserted.
The water can be kept hot with an
eight candle power, boiling with a 16
candle power, or rapidly boiled with
a 50 candle power. The cost of using
this pot for the daily shave for a
week is about 2 cents.—New York
Telegram.
How Javanese Settle Quarrels.
The Javanese manner of settling
quarrels is quite original. When one
man has offended another, the in
jured party gives notice that he is
angry by drawing in the sand before
the door of the offender a circle with
a straight line across it, indicating
that his affection, which would have
been eternal, has been cut in two.
Friends of both parties then shut
them up. They parley awhile, then
pretend to be horn again, prattle as
little children, and finally as men be
come reconciled and embrace. Should
one he refractory and refuse to be
conciliated, he is ostracized by the
community so effectually that he is
soon brought to terms. It is just
possible that our enlightened citizens
might consider this method better
than knockdown arguments and
certainly much cheaper than going
to law.—Harper's Bazar.
Buies For the Napkins.
There is a good deal of uncertainty
as to whether it is or is not the thing
to fold a napkin after a formal meal.
If one is staying in- the house and
knows that napkin rings are in use
there, it seems a reflection upon that
custom to fling the napkin down in
an untidy heap. An elegantly ap
pointed table deserves better treat
ment, even at the end of the meal,
than those disheveled piles of napery
too. Therefore it always seems fit
test to simply half fold the napkin
and not attract attention to it either
by one obtrusive habit or the other.
-Phil ^ lphia Press.
Don’t Chew Toothpicks.
Don’t, oh, don’t chew toothpicks
after meals. I have seen, says a cor
respondent, the most charming look
ing girls dancing out of fashionable
dining rooms with toothpicks
clinched between their pearly teeth
as though their lives depended on it.
A drowning man will clutch at a
straw, they say, but a woman should
be going down for the third time be
fore she should clutch at a toothpick.
THE WORLD'S L A lit
AND AMERICAN RAILWAYS.
The Queen <Sj Crescent Route,
widely known as the road running the
“ Finest Trains in The South,” is in tlie
field to oarry everybody from the South
to the World’s Fair at Chicago. No
part of the Southern country is left un
eared for by this great railway and its
connections. The through Car System
is an admirable exposition of the won
derful capabilities of American rail
roading. From New Orleans, Through
Sleeping oars run daily—morning and
evening—carrying ita passengers via
Cincinnati or Louisville, as they may
select.
From Shreveport, Vicksburg and
Jackson, another Through Sleeping
Car Line comes to join and become a
part of the magnificent Vestibuled
Through Trains which,passing through
Birmingham and the famous Wills Val
ley of Alabama, is joined at Chatta
nooga by the train from Jacksonville,
Fla., Brunswick and Atlanta, Ga., over
the E. T. V. A Ga. Ry., and proceeds
north over tho boautiful Cincinnati
Southern through the grandest natu
ral scenery and most attractive histori
cal country in the world, to Oakdale,
where another magnificent Pullman
car is received, coming from the Rich
mond and Danville System from Char
leston, S. C., through Columbia, S. C.,
tlie beautiful French Broad country
and Ashville, N. C. and Knoxville,
Tennessee.
The time to Chicago is made so as to
afford the most convenient hours for
departures from tlie principle cities,
and arrivals In Chicago.
Passengers can purchase tickets good
over ono line north of the River, and
returning via another, if they desire a
variable route without extra oharge;
or they can go via Cincinnati, return
ing via Louisville, or vice versa.
Round trip tickets on sale at reduced
rates. Agents of tho Chicago line will,
on request, assist in looking up rooms
or accommodation for visitors to the
Fair.
Everything that an almost perfect
system can devise to deserve the praise
and patronage of tho travelling publio
has been provided. Any of the agents
of the company named below, will
cheerfully give all possible informa
tion and assistance ; R. II. Garhatt,
New Orleans, La. I. Hardy, Vicks
burg, Miss. J. R. McGregor, Birming
ham, Ala. E. T. Charlton, Chatta
nooga, Tenn. W. D. Cozatt, Junction
City, Ky., or D. G. Edwards, Cincin-
ARE You going to the
WORLD'S MIR
CHICAGO?
the I*. & N,
Offers Choice Several Routes.
3 Train s Daily,
Leave ATLANTA W. & A.
10.00 a. m., 2.16 p, m.,
8.20 p. m
Arrive CHICAGO 8:68 a. -
4:30 p. m., 9:30 p. m.
LESS THAN 23 HOURS TO CHICAGO
By tho Nashville Route.
THROUGH CABS! Variable
Routes. SPECIAL BATES-
02P 3 It will pay you to write me.
FRED. D. BUSII, D. P. A.
L. &. N. R. R.
_36 Wall Street, Atlaata, Ga..
Indisdensabie in
Every Gcod Kitchen.
As every 'good housewife knows,
Tho difference between a profil
ing, delicious cooking and the
opposite kind Is largely in deli
cate sauces and palatably gra
vies. liow, these require a
strong, delicately flavored stock,
and the best stock Is
Liebig Company’s
Exlract ot Beef
Ripans Tabules are com
pounded from a prescription
widely used by the best medi
cal authorities and are pre
sented in a form that is be
coming the fashion every
where.
Ripans Tabules act gently
but promptly upon the liver,
stomach and intestines; cure
dyspepsia, habitual constipa
tion, offensive breath and head
ache. One tabule taken at the
first symptom of indigestion,
biliousness, dizziness, distress
after eating, or depression of
spirits, will surely and quickly
remove the whole difficulty.
-RipansTabules may be ob
tained of nearest druggist.
Ripans Tabules
are easy to take,
quick to act, and
save many a doc
tor’s bill.
RICHMOND & DANVILLE
RAILROAD.
Tlie Greatest Southern System.
Tlie route of the Great Washing
ton and Southwestern Vestibuled
Limited, composed only of Pullman
vestibuled sleeping and dining cars
to and from New York, including
through-vestibuled sleepers between
Memphis and Washington via Bir
mingham. Atlanta, Charlotte, Dan
ville and Charlottesville.
Also, the U. S. Great Fast Mail”,
saving twelve hours, affording mag
nificent service between Boston,
New York, Washington and Atlanta,
Birmingham and the Southwest,
with through drawing-room Buffet
sleeping cars between New York
and Montgomery, connecting at At
lanta with Pullman sleepers between
Atlanta and Birmingham.
Triple daily fast trains between
the South and the North via this
great route.
Double daily trains service with
Pullman drawing-room sleepers be
tween Atlanta and Birmingham.
Also, solid through trains between
Atlanta and Greenville, Miss., with
Pullman sleepers Atlanta and Bir-
minglian, and Birmingham and
Winona.
For maps, summer home folders,
timetables, sleeping car reservation
apply to any agent of the Richmond
& Danville R. R., or address
W. H. TAYLOE,
D. P. A., Atlanta, Ga.
S. H. HARDWICK,
Ass’t. Gen’l. Pass. Agent.
W. A. TURK,
General Passenger Agent.
•TESTIMONIALS published in
“ behalf of Hood’s Sarsaparilla, are
as reliable and worthy of confidence as
if from your most trusted neighbor.
PARKER’S
HAiH BALSAM
Cleaners anil bcuutific* the hair.
Promoted a luxuriant growth.
Never Fnila to Eeatoro Gray
Hair to ito Youthful Color.
Cures scalp diseases & hair tailing.
60c, end $ 1.00 at Druggists
ho Consumptive and FeeDle and.ii who
tt'er from exhausting diseases should use Parker h Ginger
it Cough, Weak!
eParkcr’u Ginger
Lungs, Debility, In~
u and Pain. 60c. & $L
IlfiDERCOHNS.
ups all p;un. Makes walk;]
i, Rheumatism ....AW fife.'* »L
ilv sure cure for ComM
For Malaria, Liver Trou
ble, or Indigestion, use
BROWN'S IRON BITTERS
W. L. DOUGLAS
S3 SHOE NoVttn
Do you wear them 7 When next In need try a padb.)
Best In the world.
$3.00
$2.50
42.00
FUR LADIES
#2.00
#1.75
FOR BOYS
*1.75
If you want a fin* DRESS SHOE, muds tn the latest
styles, don’t piy $6 to $8, try my #3, $3.50, $4.00 *r
$5 Shoe. They tit 0411 at te custom made end look end
wear as well. If you wish to economlzeln yosr footwear,
do so by purchasing W. L. Douglas Shoes, Name end
price stamped on the bottom, look for It when you buy
W. L. DOUGLAS, Braekton, Kua. Sold by.
EDMONDSON & SEAY BROS.
.Perfectly Well. V
Fillmore, Dubuque Co., la., Sept., 1389.
Mias K. Finnlgan writes: My m ,ther and
sister UBod Pastor Koenig's Nerve 1'onie foi
neuralgia. They are bolh perfectly well now
and never tired of praising the Tonics.
Las Vegas, Now Mesieov July 8,1890.
Whon I was young my mother hiwl a bad
fright and she gave mo her bosom because I
wau crying, and two hours after 1 had ill y ami
Attack of heart disease, has tor Keen ig’g .Nerve
Tonic bas done me much gp**d atui hap had tlie
desired effect. MIGUEL A.
Morrilton, Ark., Ot-t. it, MS**
^or four yearb my stepdaughter was. auoieot
do epilopuioftts, and oh<» use of Pastor &oeiug’ir
Nerve lo.uic gave imui“dia e satisfaction and
since aho commenced taking it she hue not bad
evou ihe slightest symptoms or the disease. My
heartfelt thanks to this medicine.
W022N idOB.VllDT
A Valuable Book NervoUi
L IJL L Diseases sent tree to any address.
■ H I ■ an< T poor patients can also obtain
I IRtaki tills medicine free of charge.
This remedy has been prepared by the Reverend
Pastor Koenig, of Fort Wayne, led., since 1856,and
Is now prepared under bis direction, by the
KOESIG TJSD. CO., Chicago, III.
Sold by F>-
Yarjire '
! or Bottle. & for 80,
for
Nature’s
Remedy
FOR a©"
Liver
Complaint
Sche
NCR’S
IViANPRAKE
Liver Pills
, “ANAKESIS” (fives Instant
I relief and is an infallible
Cure for Piles. Pricegl. By
FBox 2416, New York Otar.
If you ' feel weak
and all worn out take
BROWN'S IRON BITTERS